Heavy rock with rich layers and textures
5
By GoocherZ
First, if you haven't seen the half hour documentary on the making of this album, I'd highly recommend it. It comes with the $13 version of this album.
Okay… now about the music...
The album opens with (1) "One," a haunting instrumental that segues seamlessly into…
(2) "The Broken", a pounding, dark, balls-to-the-wall tune. Claudio's vocal intensity, combined with the wild drumming and crunching guitars -- seeming ever on the edge of feedback -- give "The Broken" a vibe that I can only describe as "becoming unhinged." Two thumbs way up.
(3) "Guns of Summer" -- intense and chaotic -- resolves to an odd-time chorus and Claudio's signature vocal harmonies. The drumming on this tune is insane. The whole song sounds like a train careening down a mountainside and it could come off the rails at any moment. The chorus guitars contain retro hints of (I'm grasping at straws here) Hum. This is one wild and eerie ride.
(4) "Here We Are Juggernaut" is a beautifully hookish song, with absolutely killer drums. It comes with a catchy chorus sandwiched between wild verses that keep pushing the intensity until about halfway through the song. At that point, the musical storm clears just long enough to reveal a peaceful but darkened sky. Then it jumps back into, and closes with, the wild chorus.
(5) "Far" is a sparsely populated soundscape carried by a retro-fuzzy guitar and slick drum part. Its simplicity is what sets this song apart. Claudio's melodic, echoey vocals stand against the pretty/gritty/simple march of the other instruments. This song is an oasis with a great vibe.
(6) "The Shattered Symphony" starts with distant guitars, then kicks into an unsettling verse with a macabre, palm-muted guitar on the right and a counter-melody guitar line on the left. The mood of this tune is like slipping down a dark slope, interspersed with moments of hope. The slide (verse) is broken by peaceful, pleasant outcroppings (chorus). It is multi-layered, dense, and ends with some feedback wizardry.
(7) "World of Lines" starts as a forward-moving song with a nice chorus. I'd love to hear this one on the radio (if I listened to radio). The verses are somewhat pedestrian -- by Coheed standards, anyway -- while the choruses are driving and hookish. The bridge starts at the 2 minute mark, and it is dark, velvety, intense, gritty, and melodically beautiful (vox).
(8) "Made Out of Nothing (All That I Am)" is heavy and forceful. Another great song to listen to while driving to work. The chorus is gorgeously melodic, and an instant classic. Nothing stands out as particularly brilliant about this one. It's just a solid, well-constructed song with subtle layers of background vocals and synths, and a cool ending.
(9) "Pearl of the Stars" is deliciously different. The vibe, the pace, even Claudio's baritone vocal line. The drums, the guitar solo, the lush but subtle brass in the background, the spookiness, the melody. It resonates emotionally. A must hear.
(10) "In the Flame of Error" opens with spooky, apocalyptic noises that give way to a wall of guitars, drums and bass that bulldoze straight through the chaos. I like the dynamic contrast of the verses against the choruses. This one didn't grab me at first, but it will probably be one of my favorites in time. The creepy bridge is a nice touch.
(11) "When Skeletons Live," like a couple other tunes, starts with haunting, non-musical sounds, then dives into a hard rocking but sparsely populated verse that somehow creates a great deal of "space." The chorus make up the difference: huge wave of lush, crunchy guitars, synths, drums and bass roiling under Claudio's melodic and passionate vox. The pre-choruses are pretty cool, too, and setup the choruses nicely.
(12) "The Black Rainbow" is the crowning jewel. I'll let you discover it. :)
Bonus track on the $13 version:
(13) "Chamberlain (Demo Version)." This doesn't sound like a demo. It weaves a heavy, darkish tapestry and moves inexorably forward with a great verse and chorus. I love the definitive ending.
(14) "The Lost Shepherd (Demo Version)" This one sounds demoish because of how the drums are miked/mixed (mono with room ambiance), and perhaps the lead vox in a couple spots. The drummer plays the crap out of that kit, and it's a great performance. Wish they'd produced a finished version.
(15) "Hush" is not a demo, but a finished studio recording. It opens with a deep-pocketed rhythm, and drives forward with classic Coheed intensity. It is a heavy and hard-driving song that has a "lighter" vibe because of Claudio's signature vocal melodies and harmonies. I wish Coheed had squeezed this onto the regular version of the album, because this is an instant classic.